BenevolentAI announced that AstraZeneca has added a novel target for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) to its discovery portfolio through its collaboration with BenevolentAI. Second target to be selected this year from the extended collaboration with AstraZeneca, highlighting continued positive progress in the field of target identification. Novel target for SLE was discovered using BenevolentAI's AI-drug discovery platform and experimentally validated by AstraZeneca.

BenevolentAI?s strategic collaboration with AstraZeneca began in 2019 in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and chronic kidney disease, with the collaboration expanded in January 2022 to include heart failure and SLE. The success in the extension phase of the collaboration follows the announcement last month that AstraZeneca had selected a novel heart failure target to enter its portfolio and further demonstrates how the Benevolent PlatformTM can be applied across multiple therapeutic areas. The strength of the collaboration in the identification of novel and robust targets is due to its innovative structure combining AstraZeneca?s scientific and disease-specific expertise with BenevolentAI?s AI-driven drug discovery platform and biomedical knowledge.

As with the initial collaboration with AstraZeneca, the 2022 extension included an upfront payment on signing, as well as research funding alongside discovery, development and commercial milestones, in addition to tiered royalties on net sales of any commercialised products. SLE, or lupus, is a chronic autoimmune disease where the immune system mistakenly identifies the body?s own tissues as foreign. In people with lupus, the immune system creates autoantibodies to attack the body?s own tissues.

These autoantibodies form immune complexes causing inflammation, pain and damage ? often affecting the organs and joints in severe cases. Extreme fatigue and cognitive issues are also common, along with comorbidities including cardiovascular disease.

Lupus disproportionately affects females and people of Asian, Black African and Caribbean heritage.